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Publishing your research Professor Gavin Reynolds Honorary Professor: Biomedical Research Centre, Sheffield Hallam University, UK Professor Emeritus: Queen’s University Belfast, UK Visiting Professor: SouthEast University, Nanjing; University of Malaya, Kuala Lumpur; Naresuan University, Thailand Past-President: British Association for Psychopharmacology Publishing your research • • • • • • What you need for a great paper Understanding how biomedical research is done Select the right journal How to write a paper How to write to the editor How to respond to reviewer’s comments So you want a great paper! • To have a great paper you need to have: • Great results! – Which need to be novel, clear and meaningful. – But to get great results you need to have: • A great project! – Which needs to be well designed, adequately powered. – But to have a great project, first you need: • A great idea! How biomedical research is done • • • • • Identify the problem Understand the background Propose the hypothesis Design the study Do the work • Collect the sample, make the measurements • Analyse the data • Write and publish the report • Identify the next problem... How biomedical research is done – an example The problem: • Some drugs used to treat schizophrenia make people gain weight. • This can cause increases in diabetes and heart disease • People have different responses – some get very fat, some have no weight increase, even when they receive the same drug. How biomedical research is done – an example Understanding the background: • Antipsychotic drugs used to treat schizophrenia have effects on the brain. • Our brain controls how much we eat. • There are receptors in the brain affecting appetite that these drugs may block. • Differences between people in weight gain may be due to genetic differences. How biomedical research is done – an example Developing the hypothesis: • There are genetic differences between people in weight changes after drug treatment for schizophrenia. • These differences can be found in genes controlling eating. “Variability in the gene for the 5-HT2C receptor is associated with weight gain during antipsychotic drug treatment.” How biomedical research is done – an example Design and do the study: • Find patients with schizophrenia receiving drugs for the first time. • Measure changes in weight over 10 weeks. • Investigate genetic differences between patients in one gene important in controlling appetite. How biomedical research is done – an example Analyse the results: • Genetic differences between patients were related to the amount of weight gain. • Patients with one genetic variant had much less weight gain. Period of drug treatment How biomedical research is done – an example Write and publish the report: How to select the right journal • What is the “right” journal? – – – – – – The right readership – specialist or general? The highest impact factor? Included in Pubmed? Previously published related papers? Rapid publication? Appropriate for style/format of report? Sympathetic to Asian manuscripts? How to write a paper • Having great results is not enough. You need to: – Understand how your work relates to work from other groups – But don’t forget that others in your research group may be doing related work – understand that too! • Write for the reader – What is interesting for you may not be for the reader – Decide what your main message is, and focus on that – Ask a colleague to read it through and criticise • Be aware of other related papers – Always think about how your work adds to, or improves on, other research. How to write a paper • Read and follow the journal instructions – Look at the layout of published papers. You can use other papers as a “template” for your report – But do not “copy and paste” from other papers! Editors have software that can detect this! And referees hate it when they see their words repeated by someone else! – Be tidy! Use page break to separate sections, figures etc. – Tables and figures in separate files or at the end of text file – Always define abbreviations the first time you use them: “Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is… We measured BDNF…” – Format references correctly – Correct format for abstract and text headings How to write a paper • Introduction – Most journals prefer the introduction to be just a brief summary of the background leading up to your work – Go from the general to the particular: Start with a general statement of the context of your work: “Depression is common in patients with Parkinson’s disease, who frequently respond poorly to antidepressant drugs” – End with the particular focus of your research: “Thus we aimed to determine whether this genetic polymorphism is related to the response to depression of patients with PD” – Include a statement of your hypothesis or research question How to write a paper • Methods – For human samples, list inclusion and exclusion criteria, indicate “written informed consent” and ethical approval – For in vivo animal studies, always indicate ethical standards. – Experimental methods can be brief if they replicate published methods: “…following the method of Yang et al (2011)…” or “… based on the method of Yang et al (2011). In brief, this involved…” How to write a paper • Results – Include all results you wish to report, but do not interpret or comment on them. – Refer to results in tables/figures, but do not repeat the data in the text. You can report it in another way (e.g. %). – Age, sex etc. of a sample are results, not for the methods section, unless predetermined in the sample collection • Statistical results – Be accurate in describing the data – Not “…was decreased” but “…was significantly decreased” – Not “…was not decreased” but ”…was not significantly decreased” 1. Statistically highly significant difference; “is significantly much less”. 2. No difference between the mean values – “no difference” is only correct here. 3. Difference is less, but does not reach statistical significance. Not: “not different” How to write a paper • Discussion – Good to start with a simple summary of the main findings, but don’t just repeat the results. – Relate your findings to your hypothesis. – Discuss your findings in relation to other work in the field, but don’t repeat the introduction. – Be aware of the limitations and discuss them, before the reviewer asks you to do that! – Draw conclusions How to write a paper • Common language errors – Affect and effect: affect is usually a verb; effect is usually a noun, meaning consequence or result of some action – Information, never informations – Evidence, never evidences – Research, never researches – Data is plural; singular is “data point” or “datum” (rarely used). • Think about tense – present or past – “Wang et al (2007) found that cognition is impaired after methamphetamine administration…” – past perfect to describe what was done – present if the finding is generally true. How to write to the editor • Be brief – it is enough just to say: – “We wish to submit our paper entitled… for publication in …” • Remember that the editor will read the abstract to understand the content of the paper – If you need to explain your work in the letter to the editor, then you have not written the abstract clearly! How to write to the editor -II • But you can emphasise important aspects if it is particularly notable: – “We believe the finding that … has important implications for future diagnostic testing and treatment” • Remember that the editor is interested in increasing the impact factor for his journal – “As the results may be seen as controversial, they should attract substantial interest and citations” How to respond to the reviewers • You respond to the reviewers’ comments but you write to the editor. – So you can point out to the editor if the reviewer is wrong, or has missed something, or is being inflexible over a disputed point • Make your response clear and brief - include each of the reviewer’s points in your response and address it: – The authors have not included the units in table 3 – We have now corrected this error – They have failed to cite the report that this polymorphism is associated with depression (Smith et al) – The reviewer has missed our mention on p12 of several reports failing to replicate the finding of Smith et al. How to respond to the reviewers - II • If you believe a reviewer to be biased, or incorrect, don’t be afraid to say so to the editor: – “While the reviewer appears to reject our findings on the basis of the work of Smith et al., this is a view that is not common to more recent studies we have cited (e.g. Jones et al)…” • I usually finish by saying something like: – “We hope you agree that we have appropriately addressed all the reviewers’ concerns and believe the manuscript is now suitable for publication.” Please ask me questions!